4 MORNING ENTERPRISE SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1912 , AFRICAN FIGHTER TO BE MOOSE SPEAKER At the Portland Theatres LAST CAR LEAVES FOR OREGON CITY AT MIDNIGHT i '1 "'i 7." '' -.'" 'T - X . ?v' v?-; u-- - " , . v.wi,, iitiwi ........ . ". . t. ' lIHIi : GILBERT AND SULLIVAN FESTIVAL COMPANY AT HEILIG THEATER WEEK SEPTEMBER FIRST. The big comic opera organiztion of 100 people will present "The Mikado," "The Pirates Of Penzance," Pinafore," and "Patience" at the Heilig ""Theater, 7th and Taylor Streets, during the week beginning Sunday, September 1st. The hopes of a generation -which first witnesedj the production of, the Eeries of operatettes by Gilbert and Sullivan, and who have since mourn ed the decay of that golden age of the stage, will be cheered by the news of the engagement of the Gilbert and Sullivan Festival Company, from the Casino Theatre, New York, which in cludes DeWolf Hopper, Blanche Duf field, Eugene Cowles, George MacFar land, Kate Condon, Arthur Aldridge, Viola Gillette, Arthur Cunningham, Alice Brady, Louise Barthel and the New York Casino chorus and orches tra, which is to be made at the Heilig Theatre for one week, beginning Sun day, September 1st, during which time "The Mikado" will be presented on Sunday,; Monday and Saturday nights and at the Saturday matinee; "The Pirates of Penzance" Tuesday and Friday nights; "Pinafore" at the Wednesday matinee and on Wednes day night and "Patience" for a single time only on Thursday night. It was in 1875 that W. S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan began to work together. In the following ten years were produced "Pinafore," "The Pi rates of Penzance," Iolanthe," Pa tience," The Mikado" and "The Gon doliers." The partnership acquired the kind of fame that Is the patent of success, both popular and well mer ited. Their comic operas were clean, wholesome, clever, and really comic, in more than in music. They were grateful to the ear and eye and mind of persons of all ages'. Sullivan's tunes were sung and whistled every where, and Gilbert's songs and dia logues became household words and were re-written and parodied more widely than; even Kipling's worst music hall contributions. These two , wonderful men never proceeded on the .theory that people who go the) theatre for light enter tainment were either brainless or un clean of mind.' Gilbert was the mas ter of topsy turvy nonsense and met rical jingle, but he had plenty of ideas and was not afraid to use them; He nattered his audiences by assuming that they were intelligent, and, con trary to the prevailing belief among theatrical directors of the present time, the audiences did not resent his . faith in their ability to appreciate j true wit and sharp satire. The best , test is that today, thirty-three years , after the production of his first opera, ! and Gilbert libretto stands reading in ! cold print, and is liable to leave the impression of perpetual freshness. SHIELDS ANSWERS TAX QUESTIONERS 8CHEME APPEALS TO EMOTIONS DECLARES WRITER Effort to Place Whole Burden on Land Arouses Suspicion In Minds of Many Confiscition f is Sole Aim and End. BY CHARLES H. SHIELDS. Secretary, Oregon Equal Taxation League. From all over Oregon I have re ceived inquiries as to what Single Tax really is. Widespread and ex pensive as the campaign in its favor as been, there is yet much ignorance regarding it. This I propose to dis pel herewith. Single Tax is offered as a system of taxation. It is offered as a tar. reform. It is offered as a panacea for all the ills of society. We are told that under the magic influence of Single Tax, the; inequalities so apparent in society will completely disappear; that crime, want, misery, and efen physical imperfections will' vanish with the introduction of this peculiar system of so-called axation. Appeals to Emotions. Single Tax appeals to the emotions to those whose envy and prejudice are easily awakened, and most gen erally, to a class who are not direct ly interested in the class of property affected thereby. Even Joseph Fels, the multi-millionaire of Philadelphia, CHARLES H. SHIELDS who Is financing the Single Tax movement in Oregon, owns but little land. He has made his millions from the manufacture of soap, and under the Single Tax system he would pay lititle or no taxes. Single Tax means what the term Implies one tax a single tax a tax on but one class of property, just one source of raising revenue to sus tain the government. Suspicion is Aroused. The very fact that Single Tax means a tax on one class of prop erty should be sufficient to arouse suspicion on the part of any thinking man or woman. It should at once be clear to them that there was some , specific design in thus reliev ing from taxation all forms of prop erty, except land, other than a mere reform in the system of taxation. A tax reform measure would seek to have all who are fortunate enough In this great struggle for existence, to possess property to pay their share of the operating expenses of the government in the form of a tax upon their holdings. Single Tax ignores this principle entirely. There must, then, be some other motive in urging its adoption In the state of Oregon, other than a desire to reform the present system of taxation. Object Is Apparent. The fundamental principle of Sin gle Tax is positively at variance with the accepted principles . of taxa tion and is condemned as a system of taxation by all economic writers, worthy of the title. The object of Single Tax, or a tax on land only, should at once be apparent to those who would give the subject a moment's thought discrimination against land. But why discriminate against land? Let us Bee. As Henry George was the author of Single Tax and as his master work on this subject is his book, "Prog ress and Poverty," from which all Single Tax advocates draw their in spiration and to the fundamental prin ciples of which they subscribe; and as Joseph Fels, who is financing the present Single Tax campaign in Ore gon is an avowed Henry George Sin gle Taxer, openly declaring for the abolition of private property in land, let us consult Henry George in "Progress and Poverty" and learn what this Single Tax movement in Oregon means. Quotations From George. "The truth is, and from this truth there can be no escape, that there Is and can be .no just ti tle to an exclusive possession of the soil, and- that private prop erty in land is a bold, care, enormous wrong, Tike that of chattel slavery." Again he says: "If the land belongs to the people, why continue to permit land owners to take the rent, or compensate them in any manner for the loss of Tent?" No Possible Question. Is there room for further question as to what Single Tax means? Can you not see that the object in plac ing all the burden on land is to destroy land values, to drive the dag ger deeper and deeper into private ownership of land until the rent value Is taken in the form of taxes. Then Single Tax will have accom plished the death of private prop erty in land the purpose for which It was designed. The state will then own the land. Oregon will have pass ed from a state of home owners to one of tenants. Wtlch do you prefer? Quaint Customs In Abyssinia. Quaint customs prevail in parts of Abyssinia. When a father is getting on In years the son bids him climb into a tree and jump down from the branches. If the old man staggers on landing the son spears him on the spot his usefulness is over. One tribe had a custom of sewing chance visitors up In green hides and leaving them to be killed by the contraction of the skins. With another the only orthodox way of dealing with strangers was to tie them in a bundle and roll them over a precipice. London Mail. Only One King Buried In Iceland. In Iceland it is the boast of the na tive that "only one king is buried here." That was King Roerek of Nor way (vide Snorri Sturiuson's Saga, "Heimskringia"), whom King Olaf the Holy "shipped," with the significant hint that he need not be in any hurry to return to his native tand. Roerek, who was a shrewd, peaceably minded monarch, took the hint, went to Ice land and a thousand odd years ago set tled down to farming "at a little stead height. Calfskin, where were but few serving folk, and there he dwelt and on the fourth winter got the illness which brough him to his bane. So, it is said, he is the only king that rests in Iceland." Men and Ch Idren First. The Chinese point of view of mari time disasters is peculiar. The duty of a Chinese sailor is well defined. He must save the men first, then the chil dren and finally the women. This is on the theory that men are most val uable to the state, that adoptive par ents can be found for children and that women without husbands are des titute. Fishing For Compliments. "Women are peculiar, aren't they?' "How is that?" "Mrs. Wright said she had a plain red hat and then got mad because I agreed that it was plain." Buffalo Express. Puns. The pun was at its climax early in the nineteenth century. Thomas Hood was a master punster, especially in verse. No better examples can be found anywhere than those in "Miss Kilmansegg" and the "Tale of a Trumpet" What could be neater than the argument of the fiddler trying to sell an ear trumpet: There was a Mrs. F. So very deaf She might have worn a percussion cap And been knocked on the head Without hearing It snap. Well, I sold her a trumpet. And the very next day She heard from her husband at Botany bay. New Bedford Standard. Fish For the Brain. Replying to a "Young Author," Mark Twain wrote: "Yes, Agassiz does rec ommend authors to eat fish because the phosphorus in it makes brains. So far you are correct But I cannot help you to a decision about the amount you need to eat at least, not with cer tainty. If the specimen composition you sent Is about your fair usual av erage I should judge that a couple of whales would be all you would want for the present not the largest kind, but simply good, middle sized whales." rcruel. "They tnrned the X ray on my brain, but found nothing." "What did they expect?" Baltimore American. ' Colonel King Stanley is camping on the; west side of the river. - Colonel Stanley is arranging with the Order j of Moose to give an entertainment at i the Shively Opera House September j 6. It will be entitled "A Night in In- j dia." The program will include i feats of legerderman originated by the Hindoos. Colonel Stanley claims to be the only man who usesi the East India Telepathy in his work. Colonel Stanley has been a member of fourteen armies, and has had an eventful career. He has held com missions in American armies. Central American armies and Toregu, the Yo- gie and Llamas. Colonel Stanley was ' guide near Thibet,-of the British Ar. my under Colonel Frank Younghus band, and was the first American to go to that part of Africa. He has trav eled extensively and speaks four teen languages,! and reads and writes eleveil languages. He recently came from Mexico, where he was in sever al battles. In China during 1900 he saw service in the Boxer rebellion. After that he left for India accomp-. anying Gauties in his exploration of i the Thibet. WILSON HEN WILL EXPOSEI R. FUND NEW YORK, Aug. 31. That man agers of Governor Woodrow Wilson's campaign for the presidency hope to show that Theodore Roosevelt's cam paign in 1904 was financed almost ex clusively by "big business" was ad mitted here today at Democratic na tional headquarters. When the senate committee -on priv ileges resumes its inquiry at Wash ington, October 1, into campaign con tributions Chairman Moses E. Clapp will be aslftd to inquire into a contri bution of $10,000 which the United' State Steel Corporation is alleged to have made to Treasurer Cornelius N. Bliss of the Republican national com mittee in 1904. Governor Wilson's managers pro fess to have excerpts from the min utes of a meeting of the steel trust directors when the payment of the money to Roosevelt's campaign fund was authorized, and this alleged evi dence will be given for investigation by the committee. An Unsinkable "Boat." Among the water vehicles the most extraordinary is the catamaran of the Madras fishermen. It consists of three logs lashed together flush with the sur face of the water and is propelled-with a single oar. The catamaran is really unsinkable and in rough weather could be used when an ordinary boat could not. Trimbles. Fashion in thimbles Is very luxuri ous, in some far eastern countries. Rich Chinese women have thimbles carved' out of mother-of-pearl, and sometimes the top is a single precious stone. STATE FAIR WILL START-TOMORROW . SALEM, Or., Aug. 31. When the gates of the Fifty-first annual State Fair swing open at 8 o'clock Monday i morning, it is expected every exhibit j and every piece of decoration will be in place. Secretary; Frank Meredith j and his corps of assistants are doing i everything possible to have all ar rangements completed for the open ing hour. Workmen will remain on the job all day tomorrow and, if nec essary, late tomorrow night. , No exhibition space is left untaken and with the several new features for which extra space has been pro- vided and-which have never been seen i at the state fair before, it seems the ' fair is going to reach its highest mark this year. As in the past there will be a won derfully fine showing of fat, sleek, money-making cattle ,and horses, and hogs and sheep and vegetables, and fruit, the life of which' will be a sur prise to strangers within the state and a source of great pride to Ore gonians. This year there will be about 1400 head of stock in the livestock section. There will be .50 more head of blood ed cattle than have ever been shown at any previous fair. More than 900 chickens will be there to illustrate the possibilities in raising fine poultry in this state. And for the first time an exhibit of China pheasants will be shown. Six counties will contest for the sweepstakes prize for county exhib its. For the last three years Benton county has been pocketing the -prize with a regularity that seems to have stirred up some of the other counties considerably and they are here with excellent showings. " The five, besides Benton, arej Multnomah, Clackamas, Columbia, Washington and Marion. Much interest' attaches to the chil dren's industrial exhibits. They will occupy space beneath the granstand When three-fifths of all the school children in the state have engaged in the various contests of growing and producing the necessaries of life, it may be realized what a tremendous 'j thing this children's industrial exhib it will be and of what attraction it will be for every boy and girl who visits the fair grounds. Another new feature is the eugen ics show and program which will be held each day of the week in a big tent on the grounds. Examinations of the babies will take place Monday and Tuesday from 11 o'clock a. m. to 3 o'clock p. m., and on Wednesday from 10 o'clock until noon. At 2:30 o'clock each afternoon the story-telling hour will be observed for the chil dren, and at 3:30 o'clock short talks will be given by physicians. Address es by physicians' and specialists will be given Wednesday, Thursday, Fri day and Saturday nights at 8 o'clock. In the pavilion where the county and individual exhibits will be every inch of space is taken and Secretary Meredith of the fair board says ,the exhibits will be as fine as have ever been shown here. The state insane asylum is making an exhibit for the first time of the products raised on the asylum farm and of the output of the culinary department of the insti tution. An elaborate program of fireworks has been arranged for Monday, Wed nesday and Saturday nights. British Steamers. Nearly 8.500 steamers, with a gross tonnage of over 17.000,000. sail under the British flag' CANDIDATES HAVE CHANCE TO SAVE SALEM, Or., Aug. 31. Candidates desiring to avail themselves of the low rate for arguments and cuts in the candidates' pamphlet this year will find it to an advantage to file them with the Secretary of State through the executive committee or the managers of the political party with which they are affiliated, for an amendment to the direct primary law passed by the people at the last gen eral election doubles the rates for space when arguments or cuts are fil ed by the candidates as individuals. Under the corrupt practices act as orignally passed all candidates of recognized political parties must file their arguments and cuts for the pamphlet through the executive com mittee or the managers of the party with which they were identified, and each party was allowed 24 pages. An exception was made in favor of inde pendent candidates, who were allow ed to file their! arguments and cuts as individuals and who were given two pages of space. The rate charg ed per page was $50. When section two of the direct pri mary law was amended by the people at the last general election the origi nal act was broadened by allowing candidates of recognized political par , ties for Congress, and candidates for state offices to file their arguments i and cuts as individuals. The provi sion also takes in candidates for President and Vice-President, but makes no charge for them, but for the other candidates a charge of $100 a page is made. Each candidate is al so entitled to the use of four pages in the pamphlet. Under these provisions it will, tlujrefore, be to- the advantage of a candidate who is not particular about the amount of space, to file through the executive committee or the man ager of the party whose candidate he is, at a charge of but $50 a page, while a charge of $100 is made where the files independent of the "party or ) ganization. An Unwitting Executioner. During the Boer war of 1SS1 one of the sentries of a British regiment, hav ing been found asleep at his post, was ! tried by court martial and condemned ! to be shot. At the appointed time he j was marched to a spot outside the j camp, and the troops were drawn up j to witness the execution of the" unfor ! tunate man. Just as the officer in j bharge was about to give the order to fire a bullet flew into the group of of ficers and men, and the prisoner fell dead at their feet. The shot was from the rifle of a concealed Boer marks man. In "sniping" tbe-British troops he had unwittingly acted as execu tioner. Expert Dyers. The Tyrians. it is claimed, were the most expert dyers of ancient times. The fabrics dyed with the famous tyrl an purple did not assume their proper color until after two days' exposure to the light and air. ' During this time they passed through a gradation of shades of yellow, green, blue, violet and red, which the dyers understood how to arrest and fix at any moment REFORM SCHOOL TEACHER RESIGNS SALEM, Or., Aug. 31. Unable to agree with new rules and regulations inaugurated by W. S. Hale, the new ly elected Superintendent of the Ore gon Industrial School, Roscoe Shelton, for the past three and one-half years disciplinarian at the institution, has resigned and it is declared other em ployes of the institution are, consider ing taking similar steps for the same reasons. In addition to the resigna tion of Shelton, one other resignation has been made, that of Chester Can non, farmer, though Superintendent Hale says Cannon had tendered his resignation before Mr. Hale assumed charge of the institution. The chief contention between Hale and Shelton' was as to the former's action in abolishing corporal punish ment amoung the pupils. Hale, it seems, has adopted the plan of gov erning the boys through love and af fection, and Shelton is said to have taken exception to it and resigned. Several days before his resignation went into effect, Hale caught Shelton chastising a boy and reprimanded him, with the result that Shelton took leave of his work at once. Another rule which seems to have met with resentment was one an nounced by Hale, that there would be no drinking of liquors at the institu tion or on the grounds. While, as near as can be learned, there was none of this, it is said the employes resented the insinuation contained in the state ment. Hale, when questioned with relation to the subject, admitted that he had made the last regulation and also that Shelton and he could not agree upon the discipline of inmates, especially on corporal punishment. Discussing the rule with regard to the use of intoxicatants, he said that he had made up his mind to run a clean school, and that the order was gener al and not made applicable to any one especially. Shelton, when seen, admitted his reason for resigning was his inability to agree with Hale as to the methods of 'discipline, and that a number of employes had signified their intention of resigning, because of their inabil ity to agree with Hale, but he did not know whether they had done so or not. Further than that, he would not discuss the situation. G....I. Stahlj of Portland, a former teacher in the school, has been ap pointed to succeed Shelton and Her bert Davis, another tea'cher, has been appointed to succeed) Cannon. A strikingly peculiar circumstance with relation to the situation is the fact that, though the law gives the State Board sole power to appoint the superintendent and subordinates, and also to prescribe all rules and regula tions, the members today, when ques tioned with regard to the matter, de clared they had not been advised of any changes at the school, or that any new regulations had been inaugurat ed end were surprised when they learned ot it . 4 Months in the E. B. U. Equals six to eight months in oth er schools saves $50 to $75 in board and room rent. We guarantee thorough work and good positions, E. B. U. BUSINESS COLLEGE I. E. Richardson, L. L. . D. Presi dent, 630 Worcester Block, Port land, Oregon. 11 LJEILIG n NIGHTS C,m Cnnt I THEATER ' BEGIN. Special Price Matinee Wednesday Matinee Saturday. J MESSRS. SHUBERT & WILLIAM A. BRADY PRESENT The opening; attraction of the Season of 1912-1913. THE GILBERT & SULLIVAN FESTIVAL COMPANY 5: From the New York Casino Theatre with , BLANCHE DUFFIELD GEO. MACFARLANH KATE CONDON ALICE BRADY DE WOLF HOPPER EUGENE COWLES ARTHUR ALDRIDGE VIOLA GILLETTE LOUISE BARTHEL A. CUNNINGHAM In a Revival Series of the Greatest Works of Gilbert & Sullivan," pre senting 4 i SUNDAY NIGHT .."THE MIKADO" MONDAY NIGHT "THE MIKADO" TUESDAY NIGHT ....."THE PIRATES OF PENZANCE" WEDNESDAY MATINEE "PINAFORE" WEDNESDAY NIGHT ."PINAFORE" THURSDAY NIGHT "PATIENCE" (Only Time) FRIDAY NIGHT ;..."THE PIRATES OF PENZANCE" SATURDAY MATINEE ....."THE MIKADO" SATURDAY NIGHT ?"THE MIKADO" .. .. Evenings and Saturday Hatinee Lower Floor. $2: Balcony. J1.50. ' $1, 75c, 50c; Gallery, 75c, 50c; Box Seats, $3. Special Price Wed-.1 nesaay Matinee, ?i.&u, $1, 75c, 50c. SEATS NOW SELLING FOR THE ENGAGEMENT Unqualifiedly the Best : LEDGER: The De Luxe Steel Back New improved CURVED HINGE allows the covers to drop back on the desk without throwing the leaves into a curved position. Sizes 8 1-4 to 20 inches . OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE ' headquarters for Loose Leaf Systems 5